Hardwiring antimicrobial resistance mitigation into global policy

Abstract In the wake of COVID-19, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become termed the ‘silent pandemic’, with a growing number of editorials warning that international momentum for AMR mitigation is being lost amidst the global turmoil of COVID-19, economic crises and the climate emergency. Yet, is it sufficient to now simply turn the volume of the pre-existing AMR policy discourse back up? Although existing AMR initiatives have previously achieved high levels of international attention, their impact remains limited. We believe it is time to critically reflect on the achievements of the past 7 years and adapt our AMR policies based on the substantial literature and evidence base that exists on the socioecological drivers of AMR. We argue that developing a more sustainable and impactful response requires a shift away from framing AMR as a unique threat in competition with other global challenges. Instead, we need to move towards an approach that emphasizes AMR as inherently interlinked and consciously hardwires upstream interventions into broader global developmental agendas.

In the wake of COVID-19, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become termed the 'silent pandemic', with a growing number of editorials warning that international momentum for AMR mitigation is being lost amidst the global turmoil of COVID-19, economic crises and the climate emergency. Yet, is it sufficient to now simply turn the volume of the pre-existing AMR policy discourse back up? Although existing AMR initiatives have previously achieved high levels of international attention, their impact remains limited. We believe it is time to critically reflect on the achievements of the past 7 years and adapt our AMR policies based on the substantial literature and evidence base that exists on the socioecological drivers of AMR. We argue that developing a more sustainable and impactful response requires a shift away from framing AMR as a unique threat in competition with other global challenges. Instead, we need to move towards an approach that emphasizes AMR as inherently interlinked and consciously hardwires upstream interventions into broader global developmental agendas.
Since the end of World War II, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has received numerous waves of political attention. 1 Much ink has been spilled on this topic: a quick web of science search of the terms antimicrobial resistance and antibiotic resistance revealed over 337 733 results (as of 15 April 2022), and between 1945 and 2020 there were at least 248 international reports published. 2 The most recent wave of international attention for AMR culminated with the signature of the 2015 WHO Global AMR Action Plan 1 (GAP) and released considerable resources-including the creation of ca. 102 AMR National Action Plans. 3 Yet, 7 years after the Tripartite Agreement, AMR rates continue to increase, 4 progress on infection prevention and control (IPC) programmes remains limited, 5 and there has been little or no reduction in antibiotic consumption outside of a few high-income countries (HICs). 4,6-8 Recent reviews highlight that the majority of resulting national AMR strategies are underfinanced and prioritize short-term reactive and surveillance/monitoring approaches rather than the longer-term preventive measures also recommended by the GAP. 9,10 This disconnect is particularly pronounced in lowerincome settings where AMR-specific interventions such as antibiotic usage monitoring and reduction targets achieve little in the face of other-more pressing-One Health and socioeconomic challenges, and many people still struggle to access antibiotics. 6,[11][12][13][14][15][16] Such mixed success on AMR policy implementation complicates recent calls 17 for more action on AMR: should we now continue to follow down the policy tracks of 2015 or is it time to change our approach?
Fortunately, the last 7 years have provided us with an improved understanding of the biological and societal dimensions of the AMR challenge. In the social sciences there is now widespread acceptance that antimicrobials fulfil an essential infrastructural role within modern healthcare and food production systems. Structural dependencies on antibiotics mean that behavioural interventions appealing to the 'rationality' of individuals have limited effectiveness. 14 Long-term AMR strategies must therefore move towards targeting the upstream environmental and socioeconomic factors shaping antibiotic dependency and broader disease ecologies. 18 Weaning ourselves off antimicrobial 'quick fix' solutions 19 includes improving, maintaining and expanding IPC programmes; investing in water, sanitation and hygiene systems (WASH); and broadening access to affordable healthcare. In food production, it also entails developing fair and equitable global commodity markets, reducing animal protein consumption and supporting sustainable food production. 20,21 At the environmental level, ongoing advances in microbiology and One Health surveillance systems highlight the need to address antibiotic exposure and resistance selection in terrestrial and aquatic beyond farms and medical settings. 22 Achieving these upstream AMR-sensitive interventions requires shifts in the way the AMR community frames policy challenges. Instead of emphasizing the distinctiveness of AMR or presenting resistance as a challenge of individual pathogens, particular settings, or communities, more efforts need to be directed at permanently embedding or hardwiring it into national and international sustainability and developmental agendas. At the international level, recent high-level reports 20,21 have already begun this process by calling for the integration of AMR into the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and establishing a new SDG indicator (3.d.2), where the 'Percentage of bloodstream infections due to selected antimicrobial-resistant organisms' is used as an indicator of a country's capacity to deal with human health risks. 20,21,23 The joint framing of AMR as on par with other key planetary and developmental challenges is to be welcomed. However, more can be learnt from the climate community when it comes to communicating how the success of every SDG-ranging from poverty reduction to access to safe water-both influences and is dependent upon managing the threat that AMR poses to lives and livelihoods.
Resource-pooling needs to accompany this process of policy hardwiring. As we have learnt from the 2015 GAP, new AMR indicators and frameworks remain powerless if they are not supported by robust and equitable finance schemes. The moral burden of creating these schemes falls on HICs. Similar to HICs' ethical duty to make greater investments to offset historic carbon emissions, 24,25 we should acknowledge that low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) do not have access to the same levels of antibiotic effectiveness that HICs relied on when they created-and subsequently exported-the modern health and food production systems that shaped international development frameworks. Richer countries have an obligation to assist and collaborate with poorer neighbours when it comes to strengthening local health and agricultural infrastructures while simultaneously reducing systems' vulnerabilities to AMR. HICs also need to pay greater attention to the role of global supply chains in driving antibiotic-intensive consumption practices and displacing problems of overuse and AMR pollution to poorer countries, for example in the demand for low-cost animal protein. 22,[26][27][28] In the case of LMICs, greater effort needs to be made to convince leaders that AMR mitigation is an essential part of future-proofing societies-as well as accepting that solutions will inevitably vary from those in HICs. 11,29 Throughout its existence, the AMR challenge has competed for attention and resources with other socioecological systems challenges. This has often led to narrow and overly specific antibiotic policy interventions. Rather than fearing dilution and overemphasizing AMR's distinctiveness, the AMR community should embrace the systems dimension of AMR and focus on hardwiring it into broader developmental agendas. This contextual approach will not only unlock synergies across SDGs, but also open the door for a more upstream mode of engagement that openly addresses both the complex ecological dimensions of AMR and the unequal burdens of AMR mitigation.

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